Stoic Precepts
by James Graham
Posted: Tuesday, March 17, 2009 Word Count: 122 Summary: A new poem, inspired by recent bedtime reading... |
Stoic Precepts
‘Desire what you already have’.
I wish to see again the silver cat
that pads about my garden, spying all ways,
staring, stalking, chasing a blowing leaf.
His name is Max, and he hallucinates.
He sees fat blackbirds land on fence-posts,
throws himself at them.
I wish for the knack of conjuring
this cat into a poem. I wish
for as much poetic skill
as I already have, the same
tomorrow as today.
‘Make a trial of your apathy’.
I walk the mall from end to end,
recite some poems in my head;
view my own gallery, Picasso’s
Nude with Cat, the Garden of Delights. I am
among the almond trees, or by the Rhine,
and I do not wish.
‘Desire what you already have’.
I wish to see again the silver cat
that pads about my garden, spying all ways,
staring, stalking, chasing a blowing leaf.
His name is Max, and he hallucinates.
He sees fat blackbirds land on fence-posts,
throws himself at them.
I wish for the knack of conjuring
this cat into a poem. I wish
for as much poetic skill
as I already have, the same
tomorrow as today.
‘Make a trial of your apathy’.
I walk the mall from end to end,
recite some poems in my head;
view my own gallery, Picasso’s
Nude with Cat, the Garden of Delights. I am
among the almond trees, or by the Rhine,
and I do not wish.